Scroll Top
115 W Allen Ave, San Dimas, CA 91773

Smudgepot 1986

87Smudgepot (1)

San Dimas: 13 – Bonita: 7

Friday, September 26, 1986

San Dimas secured their 11th Smudge Pot win over Bonita in the 1986 game with a 13-7 victory. It was a hard fought game between the Saints and Bearcats with both teams struggling  to move the ball. While San Dimas took an early 13-0 lead, on mistakes by Bonita’s special team, the Bearcats fought back scoring late with under two minutes left.  Time would run out before Bonita could even the score.

San Dimas was able to put first points on the board after a scoreless first quarter when a high snap flew over Bonita punter Troy Ball’s head and San Dimas took over the ball on Bonita’s 5 yard line. After an encroachment penalty against Bonita, the ball ended up half the distance to the goal. The Bearcats were able to hold the Saints off for two plays, but on the third San Dimas managed to score the touchdown on a two yard run by Felix Badibanga. With the successful point after kick by James Lim, San Dimas put up a 7-0 lead.

In the third quarter, Bonita was facing a fourth-and-five and had to punt from its 12 yard line.  With strong pressure from the Saints, Bonita’s Troy Ball was forced to get off a short 28 yard punt resulting in San Dimas gaining possession at Bonita’s 40 yard line. After a 15 yard pass by Aaron Watson and a 18 yard run by Badibanga, San Dimas was able to score another touchdown. A pack of Bearcats got through and blocked the PAT attempt with 4:57 to play igniting the Bonita faithful for the hopeful comeback. A penalty by the Saints on the play, forced them to kick off from their 25 and enabled Bonita to start their possession on their own 36.

Five plays later Bonita was at the San Dimas 42 yard line. Bearcat running back Sam Bonanno appeared to be surrounded by Saints, when he broke through several tackles down the middle all the way for the touchdown with 1:56 left in the game.  After the Bearcats put points on the board, the Saints were fighting to keep their lead. Bonita’s last minute push was not enough to pull ahead of San Dimas though, and the clock ran out with the final score at 13-7.

San Dimas coach Dick Shelburne was not happy with his players performance even in victory, “Obviously, we have a lot of work to do. A win is  a win, I guess, so we’ll take it, but we have a lot of work to do and we have to improve a lot, ” he said. “You have to give Thom (Bonita coach Thom Young) and his crew credit. They run the Wing-T and they know how to play defense. And they did. We have a lot of work to do.”

Neither team was able to accomplish much yardage, but Bonita rose above the Saints with their 152 yards gained to 104.  Bonita’s Ed marques carried the ball 23 times for 92 yards. San Dimas fullback John Koncki topped the Saints with 42 yards on seven carries while Ron Paoletto added 38 yards on 13 carries. The Saints completed two of 4 passes for 22 yards while Bonita’s quarterback was successful only two for six gaining 12 yards with 2 interceptions.

Three San Dimas players, Robert Boyde, Rick Martin and tailback Ron Paoletto got banged up and needed to be helped off the field. Two of the players that were taken off were able to keep playing, though San Dimas junior Robert Boyde did not return. “It looked like general Hospital out there,” grimaced Shelbourne.

Glenn Davis, Heisman trophy winner, and star running back for the Bearcats in the 1940s was honored at half time with a ceremony renaming of the Bonita football field to Glenn Davis Stadium in his honor.

-Emilie Stubbs ’23

Teams
Quarter 1
Quarter 2
Quarter 3
Quarter 4
Total
Bonita 0 0 0 6 6
San Dimas 0 7 0 6 13
Stats   San Dimas: Badibanga 2 yard run (Lim kick)   San Dimas: Badibanga 18 yard run (kick blocked)
Bonita: Bonanno 42 yard run (kick blocked)
 

Bonita High Logo

Varsity Bearcats

Back: Ed Marquez, Eric Dominguez, Troy Ball, Paul Wenzel, Damon Haynes, Mike Anderson, Steve Giano, Tom Roche, Tim Bolher. 

Row 4: Charlie Piehr, Vince Hernandez, Robert Harris, Mike Dives, Richard Espinoza, Marcus Royster, Jeff Bernacchi, Fred Marquez, Charlie Calderaro. 

Row 3: Aron Weaver, Kevin DeGraff, Tony Leal, Coach Davis, Coach Warren, Coach Young, Coach Riggs, Coach Martinez, Bobby Gonzales, William Huang, Kevin Hershberger. 

Row 2:  Danny Murray, Todd Young, Aaron Eaton, Brent Fox, Xavier De La Piedra, Brian Weaver, Sam Bonanno, Hector Gomez, David Alverez, Danny Garces, Robert Morales.

Front: Benjamin Jones, Joe Kary, Kevin Sayles, Kenny Barrass, Mike Salcido, Tim Gutierrez, Charles McKinney, William Trudeau, Danny McLaughlin.

The Varsity football team put out a lot of effort to make the season the best. The work began in practice, before the end of the ’85-’86 school year. There were plays to be practiced, passes to be perfected, punts to be polished, and other skills to be worked on. The team’s efforts continued through the summer. The linemen worked out in the weight room twice a week to gain strength, which would be needed in the season’s games. The receivers and backs participated in a passing league. The quarterbacks were in a summer league along with those from schools in higher divisions. One of the most memorable games was against Ganesha. Bonita held Ganesha 0-0 until the last two minutes of the fourth quarter. Ganesha finally scored to win the game 0-7. The intensity that built up during the game was tremendous. The spirit, both on the field and in the stands, was at a peak! One of the hundreds of plays the Bonita team carried out, one play by Jeff Bernacchi, in a game against Montclair, will be well remembered. He picked up the ball after Montclair fumbled. Jeff, usually a defensive player, ran and scored! The very next week, against Gary, Jeff repeated this fabulous play! Only this time he intercepted a pass. The football season, on the whole, was exciting in spite of the tragic death of Sam Bonanno which occurred as a result of an injury in the November 6 game. Sam will be missed but his memory will remain with Bonita football forever.

Smudge Pot Preview

The last time Bonita won the Smudge Pot was in 1980 when Bonita Head Coach Thom Young was then Coach Ray DeShane’s assistant. “I remember that game well,” Young said. “I was defensive coordinator. As a matter of fact, this whole coaching staff has been involved in the Smudge Pot Games.(Assistants) Eric Davis, Mike Riggs, and Tom Martinez all went to Bonita and graduated in either 1978 or 1979.”

“We told the kids, ‘hey, it’s been six years since the trophy has been here at Bonita and nobody knows what it looks like anymore.’ It’s a crucial game for us. We want to go into league play with a win”.

“I’m sure the San Dimas coaches and staff will do what they can to keep the number one rating (in the CIF Southeastern Conference). We’ll try to see that they don’t stay up there. We’ve had very good practices this week and we’re getting rid of our mistakes”.

LA VERNE — The play was a simple sweep to the right, with Bonita High School tailback Sam Bonanno carrying the ball.

“Nothing out of the normal,” said Bonita football Coach Thom Young, whose ineffective but scrappy Bearcats were on the verge of losing their eighth game of the season.

Bonanno cut downfield, racing four or five yards along the sideline, before a tackler plowed past a Bearcat blocker and wrestled him to the ground. It was, everyone agrees, a clean tackle.

Bonanno, a 18-year-old running back, sat up and took off his helmet, looking dazed. Someone asked him if he was all right. “No,” he replied, and lay back down on the field, lapsing into a coma from which he never recovered.

Three and a half days later, on Nov. 10, Sam Bonanno died. According to a spokesman for the county coroner, the cause of death was “cranial injuries.” Further tests are being conducted to determine exactly when the injuries were sustained, the spokesman said.

Because the tackle did not involve a blow to the head, the coroner’s office is interested in a report that Bonanno had suffered a mild concussion during a game five weeks before the fatal accident.

“He was taken from the field and examined by a doctor,” said Assistant Principal Bill Brinegar. “He was cleared to play again.”

It was the second death of a local high school football player in the past two weeks. Hawthorne High School offensive lineman Jeff Chai, 16, collapsed on the field and died of a heart ailment during a game against Culver City High on Oct. 31.

“This was a horrible tragedy,” said Brinegar. “One of the things we’re trying to help the students deal with was that it occurred at an event that was supposed to be one of the good parts of high school.”

To lose the popular Bonanno seemed doubly hard–enough for the school to bring in a crisis team of school psychologists to help the students cope.

By all accounts, the striking-looking senior was “special,” a charmer with looks and brains and a model citizen in the student body of 1,700. Not only was he a co-captain of the football team and one of its driving forces, but he was also an elected senior-class representative.

“Just a nice kid,” said Brinegar, who had known the youth since he was a sixth-grader at Ramona Intermediate School. “Ask him to do something and he’d do it. If you said, ‘Sam, I need some help with this,’ Sam helped with that.”

“He was the kind of person who really cared for everybody,” said a friend of Bonanno’s, Tony Leal. “He’d go out of his way to say ‘Hi’ to you.”

Bonita High School, situated on an uncluttered field on D Street, with mountains looming to the north, was a welter of raw sensitivities last Tuesday, the day after Bonanno’s death. A group of students clustered around the school’s marquee, which still bore the announcement of the Nov. 6 football game with Gahr High School.

They didn’t want to talk much, except to say that they were taking it hard.

“For the seniors, it makes a lot of things seem really important now,” said one girl, her arms folded tightly, her eyes squinting in the sun, “. . .things that weren’t so important before.”

According to Brinegar, the obvious signs of pain were there in the school’s classrooms and hallways.

“Of course, you see kids crying,” he said. “There’s a lot of being together and hugging in groups, too.”

But the curious thing about the students’ grief was the way it had served as a kind of glue, bonding them together, particularly those who had been closest to Bonanno. “Taking refuge in themselves,” Brinegar called it.

When outsiders were around, they turned quiet. But among themselves, the students turned last week into a kind of extended rap session.

It probably started last Friday evening, said Young, when it had become apparent that Bonanno had suffered irreversible brain damage.

“We didn’t want an impersonal thing to inform them, so we brought the team members together at one of the parents’ houses,” coach Young said. Also present were the cheerleaders and many friends and acquaintances of the injured player.

“There was so much emotion there,” Young said. “There would be a long silence, then somebody would remember something that Sam had done. By 2 or 3 in the morning, they were all still there. We were mentally and emotionally exhausted by all the tears and sadness and loving that was going on there. The kids were really close before, but this really brought them together.”

“It’s better when everybody talks to each other,” said Leal, a brawny 17-year-old.

‘No Good Sitting at Home’

“It’s no good sitting at home, thinking about what we would be doing if Sam was there,” added Robert Enriquez, 17, who described himself as so close to Bonanno that “I was like his shadow.”

“The counselors come around, but I don’t feel comfortable talking with them,” said Leal. “I’d rather be with friends. We’ve all been sticking together, at my house, at Robert’s house.”

The incident has sent shock waves beyond La Verne, all the way to Cerritos, where a pall settled last week on Gahr High School, the home of the opposing team in the fatal game.

“The team was very saddened and disappointed,” said football Coach Daryl Walsh, who had to contend with early erroneous reports that Bonanno had died after being brutally “gang tackled.”

‘Handled It Well’

“It was one of those things that nobody had any control over,” Walsh said. “There was no wrongdoing on anybody’s part. We kept the youngsters abreast of what was happening. I’d say they handled it pretty well.”

Walsh said administrators from Bonita High had called Gahr to assure the team that no individuals bore any responsibility for Bonanno’s death. A delegation of Gahr football players planned to attend the youth’s funeral on Saturday.

According to his friends, Bonanno, so immaculate in his appearance he was sometimes referred to as “G.Q.,” for the men’s fashion magazine “Gentleman’s Quarterly,” was one of the team’s greatest football enthusiasts.

“If we were watching a game on television, he used to say, ‘Just watch, someday you’ll see me on TV, running that ball,’ ” recalled Enriquez.

‘I’m Ready’

Young said Bonanno was so determined a player that he once tried to insert himself into a game after a contact lens had cracked under his eyelid.

“The contact was lost in the eye, and Sam kept saying, ‘I’m ready to go in right now,’ ” Young said. “When the doctor wanted to examine him, he said, ‘Can’t it wait ‘till halftime?’ The doctor pulled the lens out in halves.”

Like the rest of the team, Bonanno was small, Young said. “He was listed in the program as 5-11 and 175 pounds,” Young said. “But he was a lot closer to 5-10 and 160. He always went hard, though. He just had a lot of desire.”

In the nine games in which Bonanno played this season, of which the team won only one, he averaged 4.8 yards a carry.

Voted to Play Game

To the dismay of Bonita administrators, the team voted to play the final game of the season, against Ontario High School, on Thursday evening. All team members wore decals with the number 18–Bonanno’s jersey number–on their helmets.

“The kids said that it was what Sam would have wanted,” said Brinegar before the game. “But it’s going to be excruciating for the adults on the sidelines. Just the sound of a hit gives you the creeps now.”

According to the boy’s father, Samuel Bonanno Sr., Sam aspired to play college football.

“He took the college test a few weeks ago,” the father said. “He just wanted to be accepted in a college somewhere.”

Self-Sufficient Youngster

He described his son as a self-sufficient youngster who helped around the house. The boy worked 20 hours a week at a San Dimas Safeway store “to help out the family and to buy gas for his truck and to take care of the little things that kids are responsible for.”

He said Sam often performed chores around the house, like mowing the lawn, as well as taking care of his 11-year-old brother, Dominick.

“He was a very neat boy,” said the father. “He had a $40 bottle of cologne, even though he was just making $5 an hour. He bought his own letterman jacket for $180. This has left a lot of blank spots in our hearts that nobody else could understand.”

Both Bonanno and his wife Mary are brewery workers for Miller Brewing Co., in Irwindale. The family was moving to a new home when the boy died.

By early afternoon, the students had rearranged the lettering on the school marquee. It now read:

SAM BONANNO NO. 18 WILL REMAIN IN OUR HEARTS FOREVER

Howard-Cooper, Scott. “Bonita High Player Dies after Injury.” Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Times, 11 Nov. 1986, https://web.archive.org/web/20220728015738/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-11-11-sp-24699-story.html.

 

Glenn Davis Stadium

So many gifts, so little words Glenn Davis is short of speech after being showered with gifts, including a painter’s cap and a jersey bearing his number presented by Charlie Piehr.

Try this on for size,” says Evonne Langley as Glenn Davis admires his new Bonita jacket.

The unveiling of the Glenn Davis Stadium topped off a memorable evening.

Apparent changes on campus made our school one that students became proud to be a part of. Bonita had been experiencing a significant increase in enthusiasm among the student body and the faculty. Administrators and supporters thought of changes they could make in the school itself to boost morale. Through their actions, the all-time great running back Glenn Davis was honored by the district’s re-naming of the football field as Glenn Davis Stadium.

Glenn Davis was All-CIF in foot- ball, baseball, and track at Bonita and All-American and a Heisman Trophy Winner as a halfback for the great Army football teams of 1943- 46, while playing for the Army, he earned 11 Varsity letters in four sports. Davis was CF Player of the Year in 1942 when he lead the Bearcats to a CIF title. He was a starting to a guard on the basketball team. He earned 13 Varsity letters at Bonita while competing in at least four sports.

A great disappointment in Davis’ life was when he retired from football after playing only 2 years for the Rams due to a knee injury. Glenn explains: “I have always thought football should be fun, but it wasn’t really fun any longer. I couldn’t run right or cut left or make any kind of a fake or my knee would pop out.” He remarked that he was a better player at Bonita than he had been with the Rams.

Although the field became the district field, serving both the Bearcats and the Saints, the enthusiasm sparked from the event continued. Another change was the mural

painted on the side of the gym. This was paid for by boosters. The mural really added a classy touch to the campus. These changes gave the school a fresh appearance and the students and faculty a new attitude.

Glenn Davis with mascots Birdie Macdonald and Debbie Brownlee (Current BUSD teacher)

 

Varsity Saints

Front: John Reclusado, Steve Ritchey, Jeff Hritz, Dale Geurts, John Basel, Norman Geurts, Gus Gonzalez, Shannon Troncoso, Ricardo Miagany

Row 2: Shawn Rodriguez, Erick Ware, James Nehring, James Lim, Louie Vidaure, Joseph Sayegh, Marc Marusich, Mikel Husband, Tom Redshaw, George Chavez.

Row 3: Felix Badibanga, Geoff Carr, Adam Lyons, Coach Jeff Gorski, Coach Tim Alley, Head Coach Dick Shelbourne, Coach Dean Bennett, Ron Paoletto, Mike Coulter, David Perez.

Row 4: Mike Goff, Brian Petree, Jason Coleman, Joel Amidon, Jai Husband, Matt Pouliot, Jeff Landreth, Juan Gonzalez, Alex Acosta, Tommy Lowery, Scott Pick.

Row 5: Robert Henderson, Jimmy Miozza, Steve Millice, Eric Johnson, Landry Zimmerman, Marcus Troyano, Phil Sanchez, Scott Bowman, Don Ross, Dennis Skinner, Jim Newman. Back: Bill Hensche, Bob Boyde, Todd James, Chris Young, Ernie Stumpf, Ellis Gordon, Sean Spadaro, Roger Pattico, Luka Vasili, Niels Henze. 

Spring conditioning and summer passing leagues had players looking forward to meeting their opponents and their goals. It was a season of ups and downs at practice and in competition. Those who missed too many practices in the summer were introduced to P.R.’s. Pride reminders, better known as “up-downs.” came in a series of 40 and 80. downs, They were punishments consisting of running in place, hitting the ground with the whole body, and then getting up for 79 more. As the season progressed, P.R.’s were issued for absences, tardies, missing Friday reports, cheating, mouthing off, and just screwing around. Most found it more profitable not to get them. “There’s nothing worse than getting ‘Up-downs’ after a hard practice!” said senior linebacker and guard Cary McCaslin. “Ar the beginning, the season seemed really long, but as we went through it seemed short. “ said senior cornerback Kenny Lim.

After closely beating Montclair and rival Bonita, the team was handed a loss by the Brahmas of Diamond Bar. They came back to bear Charter Oak only to lose back to back to Gladstone and Baldwin Park. The ream built some confidence late in the season by soundly putting Sierra Vista and Bas- sett away. Despite the early losses the Saints still had one more chance to go to CIF, and Azusa stood in the way. The game was a hard-played one but missed field goals, unsuccessful third-down conversions, and a crucial fumble gave the Aztecs the win. This loss kept them home for CIF for the first time in four years. “Every year that I’ve been here we won the Smudge Pot and went to CIF, I can’t believe we didn’t make it,” said senior tackle Ricky Martin, summing up this up and down season.

Smudge Pot Preview

San Dimas coach Dick Shelbourne wasn’t aware that the Saints were ranked number one in the CIF Southeastern Conference this week. When informed of this he burst into hearty laughter.

“That’s amusing, honest, he said. “It’s flattering but I don’t see how we rate it. We’ve only played one game and we only played well one half of that.

“We were ranked number three before we ever played a game. Then we scrimmaged Ontario and moved up to second. Now we’re first and we’ve only played half a game. At this time of the year, it doesn’t mean a whole lot. If we’re number one nine weeks from now, it’ll mean something.”

“Fortunately, it hasn’t had any effect on the kids. They know we haven’t earned that honor yet. As far as this game is concerned, previous scores don’t mean a lot. Any time Bonita and San Dimas play, it is a hard-hitting battle and that’s what we expect this year. “

“We are in as good a shape as any time since I’ve been here. The off-season weight program has helped. We haven’t had those nagging muscle pulls”.

Related Posts